Under Ogre

Kids might well be amused by the frenetic pacing of Shrek, the latest computer-animated film from DreamWorks. It moves so quickly it’s nearly a blur, though kids need not get the jokes to enjoy frolicking in the muck (and the maggots) with a green, snaggle-toothed ogre who wants only to…

African Drums Beat

As more people awaken to world music, transplanted artists from around the globe find ways to share their cultures locally. Two African groups will do just that when they perform this weekend. West Africa has always been a source of music and dance, and Boulder’s two-year-old Bantaba World Dance &…

Eire Heads

You could call it the greening of North America, because it seems that you don’t have to be Irish to enjoy things Gaelic in the New World. Celtic-flavored successes such as Riverdance and Angela’s Ashes prove that, as do lower-profile, hometown successes like Denver’s own Irish theater company, Tir Ná…

Wordsmith

There’s no question about it: Roland Bernier is one of Denver’s greatest contemporary artists. His vision is remarkable in its variation and monumentality. His output is astounding. His relentless quest for innovation is breathtaking. And his solo, Between the Lines: Word Works by Roland Bernier, on display in the Denver…

Artbeat

Artyard (1251 South Pearl Street, 303-777-3219) is currently hosting 1500 degrees, an unusual exhibit that showcases a body of recent work by Susan Meyer (formerly Susan Meyer Fenton). The pieces were all made while Meyer was an emerging artist in residence at the famous Pilchuck Glass School in Washington State…

Alice in Cyberland

Trying to make sense of everything that happens in the LIDA Project’s Alice is like trying to decipher every line of routing code that appears at the bottom of an e-mail. A few characters and phrases sound and look familiar, but deciphering the whole assemblage seems an impossible task for…

In the Name of Science

In the first scene of An Experiment With an Air Pump, a scholar asserts that scientists are beatified by their search for truth. A few scenes later, another character asks whether good scientists are, by definition, good human beings as well. As British dramatist Shelagh Stephenson’s play continues, two different…

The Product

Heath Ledger, wearing the scowl of the anxious and uneasy, is having trouble standing still. He most certainly would rather be anywhere but here: killing time in a TV studio, waiting to be interviewed during a live afternoon newscast. Waiting to promote his new movie. Waiting to assume the guise…

Ill Luzhin

The crimes Hollywood has committed against the major Russian novelists would themselves fill a pretty hefty tome. While reducing giants like Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky and Pasternak to lavish costuming and snappy dialogue over the years, the studio moguls also made some eccentric casting choices — for instance, cover boy George Hamilton…

A Hard Day’s Knight

Let us first in olden verse this critic’s cynical curse disperse: The greet unwashede consummethe crappe, Fro Jerrye Springgere to ganggsta rappe; Bothe yonge and olde, ’tis sore pitee, Doth foule thir hertes with drede teevee, Thus slye produceres, with bisynesse cunning, Devysde a shew to pyne come running, Consummeres…

Sage Words

The spread-out life women lead in the rural West poses unique challenges, not the least of which would be steering through the vagaries of friendship. When complicated by distance and spotty populations, that sterling necessity in any woman’s day often resembles the ubiquitous sage plant that covers the prairie, hanging…

Still Mortifying

At 73, Mort Sahl has influenced virtually every topical comedian working today — a distinction he neither claims for himself nor appears to take much pride in. He calls Politically Incorrect host Bill Maher “a guy trying to pass himself off as a Libertarian”; he bristles at Dennis Miller’s reliance…

Thermo-dynamics

Last spring, in conjunction with the annual meeting of the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts, there was an unprecedented effort by local galleries, art centers and museums to present shows on the broad topic of ceramics. The result was nearly a hundred exhibits all at the same…

Swing Away

August Wilson came to prominence when the first of his cycle of plays about black life, each set in a different twentieth-century decade, graced the Great White Way in 1984. A year earlier, though, another of Wilson’s works had begun playing at theaters in New Haven, Chicago and San Francisco…

Indecent Exposure

Theater companies that produce plays about the evils of censorship are sometimes guilty of committing the very sins they seek to decry — a dilemma that’s brought home in a pair of one-acts billed as The Decency Acts. The joint effort of Promethean Theatre and the Bug Theatre Company is…

Shoot Straight

Last thing first. At this very moment, Chris Carter sits behind his desk in the Ten Thirteen Production offices, on the 20th Century Fox lot in Studio City, California, finishing the final X-Files episode of this season. The show’s creator has just one scene left to write–the very last–and that…

Troubles With Harry

Just when we culturally deprived, mystery-starved Americans were convinced that the most delicious of movie genres, the French thriller, was dead and buried, a literate and exciting new filmmaker named Dominik Moll has emerged to revive it — and set our nerves exquisitely on edge. It’s a minor miracle that…

Petty Woman

Presently sitting in a very peaceful meditational facility. First time here. The location (which shall remain unnamed so as to maintain nondenominational vibe) was selected specifically for the loving creation of this review, as it provides an almost perfect contrast to The Center of the World, the new motion picture…

Peace Be With You

While much of the world employs violence to solve troubles, the Reverend Andy Carhartt chooses another tactic. “There’s something very powerful about love and forgiveness,” says Carhartt, a minister at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Boulder. This Sunday he’s spreading that message when St. John’s hosts the debut speaker in…

Click Me

Think of the theater, and you think of a curtain, a proscenium, a rack of lights. Characters enter and exit; a story is told. But how, within that narrow framework, will theater keep up with times so modern that all the action seems to be shifting into newer, more technologically…

Shearer Delight

There is no good place to begin with Harry Shearer, because he doesn’t sit still long enough to allow one the chance to focus. He is a blur, forever in motion–on his way to the radio station, on his way from the movie studio, on his way to the publisher’s…

Detective Stories

It was probably a year or so ago that Molly Dubin, the curator of the Mizel Museum of Judaica, asked me if I knew anything about an artist named Akiba Emanuel. I didn’t, so Dubin explained that Emanuel was a modernist painter and sculptor who had lived in Denver off…